Tag: Australia

Mar
25

The Radioactive Racism Behind Nuclear Energy

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The Radioactive Racism Behind Nuclear Energy

When the apocalyptic cloud erupted over Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the world woke up to the dawn of the nuclear age. Today, if we survey the landscape of nuclear development across the planet, we see that the destructive impacts of the technology are often paired with the dehumanizing impacts of environmental racism.
At every point in the nuclear production chain, the industry has sloughed a disproportionate share of the risk on marginalized communities, from native peoples in the Southwest United States to the Australian outback. While the rest of the world hums along with nuclear power, many of these communities have fought a losing battle against the standard corporate line that technological advancements have led to seamless safety.
Last week in South Africa, environmental activists recharged their anti-nuclear campaign in light of the metastasizing disaster in Japan.
Today, in the shadow of Fukushima, the African continent’s one nuclear power plant, near Cape Town, is no longer a symbol of South Africa’s relative industrial advancement. Rather, it is an emblem of a ruthless pursuit of new fuel at the public’s

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Mar
15

What International NGOs Do Marketing Right

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What International NGOs Do Marketing Right

On Friday, I wrote a post on the use of misleading tactics by CARE in order to raise money. I highly suggest reading the comments as they provide some excellent additional points to my post. However, one challenge got me thinking. Ward A wrote:
He is 100 percent right

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Mar
01

Green News Report March 1 2011 Audio

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Green News Report March 1 2011 Audio

TWITTER: @GreenNewsReport.
The ‘GNR’ is also now available on your cell phone via Stitcher Radio’s mobile app!.
IN TODAY’S RADIO REPORT: Dems call for probe in U.S. Chamber of Commerce plot to target citizens like us; Indictment in WV coal mine disaster investigation; Deepwater drilling permits resume in the Gulf, but that’s still not good enough for Republicans; Climate scientists in fake ‘ClimateGate Scandal’ vindicated — AGAIN; PLUS: More on the WI GOP power play to privatize Wisconsin’s power plants … All that and more in today’s Green News Report!
Got comments, tips, love letters, hate mail? Drop us a line at GreenNews@BradBlog.com or right here at the comments link below. All GNRs are always archived at GreenNews.BradBlog.com.
IN ‘GREEN NEWS EXTRA’ (see links below): NYT “fracking” bombshell: toxic & radioactive water dumped in rivers; US

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Feb
28

Liveblogging the 2011 Oscar telecast

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Liveblogging the 2011 Oscar telecast

8:39PM EST
Off to a good start with the hosts, James Franco and Anne Hathaway, inserted into scenes from several of the Oscar nominees, on an Inception theme. The writing is funny and their performances sparkle – but mostly, the writing is funny. Best gag: Morgan Freeman narrating Alec Baldwin’s dream. Then Franco and Hathaway opened up with a decent opening banter poking fun at themselves as tools to attract a young

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Feb
03

Green News Report February 3 2011 Audio

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Green News Report February 3 2011 Audio

TWITTER: @GreenNewsReport.
The ‘GNR’ is also now available on your cell phone via Stitcher Radio’s mobile app!.
IN TODAY’S RADIO REPORT: Midwest digs out and Australia dries out — just two of this week’s ‘Storms of the Century’; Oh, look! Glenn Beck misrepresents climate science (again)!; GOP’s solution to Egypt’s unrest: more offshore drilling! … PLUS: Obama talks sexy, sexy energy efficiency … All that and more in today’s Green News Report!
Got comments, tips, love letters, hate mail? Drop us a line at GreenNews@BradBlog.com or right here at the comments link below.

read full news from www.huffingtonpost.com

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Jan
25

New Year New Life New You Part One

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New Year New Life New You Part One

The past three months have been a bit of a blur. I have had so much to say, but no time to say it. If anyone knows me well, I can be a slave to my job and lead the unsettled lifestyle of a nomadic wanderer. I mean, I moved a total of four times since my trip to Paris in early

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Jan
20

Green News Report January 20 2011 Audio

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Green News Report January 20 2011 Audio

TWITTER: @GreenNewsReport.
The ‘GNR’ is also now available on your cell phone via Stitcher Radio’s mobile app!.
IN TODAY’S RADIO REPORT: Fox “News”: The most disinformative name in news!; California retreats…from the rising ocean; Update in the investigation of the nation’s worst coal mine accident in 40 years; Northern hemisphere’s growing season is growing longer … PLUS: Shh, don’t tell Fox! The Chinese president is a “global warming alarmist” … All that and more in today’s Green News Report!
Got comments, tips, love letters, hate mail? Drop us a line at GreenNews@BradBlog.com or right here at the comments link below. All GNRs are always archived at GreenNews.BradBlog.com.
IN ‘GREEN NEWS EXTRA’ (see links below): Secret USDA study shows new pesticide is killing bees; Taxpayers subsidize “free” parking; Biotech firm patents organism that poops oil; Fracking Hell: the untold story of natural gas development in the Northeast; Interior

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Jan
18

Green News Report January 18 2011 Audio

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Green News Report January 18 2011 Audio

TWITTER: @GreenNewsReport.
The ‘GNR’ is also now available on your cell phone via Stitcher Radio’s mobile app!.
IN TODAY’S RADIO REPORT: The sun also rises — two days earlier?!?! (in Greenland); Carbon capture project may be failing in Canada; Obama orders overhaul of regulations to help U.S. businesses … PLUS: Eisenhower’s other prescient warning, 50 years ago this week … All that and more in today’s Green News Report!
Got comments, tips, love letters, hate mail? Drop us a line at GreenNews@BradBlog.com or right here at the comments link

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Jan
13

Green News Report January 13 2011 Audio

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Green News Report January 13 2011 Audio

TWITTER: @GreenNewsReport.
The ‘GNR’ is also now available on your cell phone via Stitcher Radio’s mobile app!.
IN TODAY’S RADIO REPORT: Australia is drowning… so is China… so is Brazil; EPA smackdown on Mountaintop Removal coal mining; Still more on the BP Oil Disaster in the Gulf … PLUS: It’s official: 2010 was the hottest year on record

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Dec
27

Five Day Trips From Sydney Australia PHOTOS

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Five Day Trips From Sydney Australia PHOTOS

The Christmas freeze may be setting in over the northern hemisphere but Down Under they’ll be firing up the barbie for their Christmas dinner. So to feel a little sunnier, here are some of the best places to get out of town.
Images and captions provided by CheapOair.
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There’s nothing like a quick trip out to some vineyards and, as the oldest wine area in Australia, the Hunter Valley is perfect for this. there are 80 vineyards to choose from (including famous brands like Lindemans and Hardy’s) and as it’s just 90 minutes away from Sydney, it’s the perfect escape. If you really want to see the views, try a hot air balloon ride.
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Dec
14

WikiLeaks New Zealand Sells Itself as More of a Pacific Country Than Australia

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WikiLeaks New Zealand Sells Itself as More of a Pacific Country Than Australia

Nuku’alofa, Kingdom of Tonga. WikiLeaks has given New Zealand’s Sunday Star-Times 1,490 diplomatic cables from the United States’ Wellington Embassy. To date, only a few of those cables have been publicly released. However, they clearly indicate an increasingly close relationship between New Zealand and the U.S., as well as an increasing reliance by the U.S. on New Zealand when it comes to Pacific security issues.
While a closer relationship is desirable, given the growing importance of the Pacific in global affairs, primary reliance on New Zealand to guide the way in the Pacific is not sufficient and leaves the region vulnerable to outside influences and internal instability.
U.S.-New Zealand Security Relationship
New Zealand Prime Minister John Key and U.S. President Barack Obama at the 2010 Nuclear Security Summit.
The renewed engagement between the U.S. and New Zealand seems to have gained momentum about five years ago. Since the 1980s, due in large part to its anti-nuclear stance, NZ was not treated as a full security partner by the U.S. While still a member of ‘Five Eyes’ (a security grouping of the U.S., U.K., Canada, Australia and New Zealand), it had restricted access to intelligence.
That started to change around 2005. A 2007 cable written as a ‘scene-setter’ for then New Zealand PM Helen Clark’s visit to Washington reads: “Clark has since the 2005 election appointed to key positions a number of officials well disposed towards working with the United States.”
Officials named included Foreign Minister Winston Peters , Secretary of Defense John McKinnon, and Director of the NZ Security Intelligence Service Warren Tucker. The cable explains: “these officials have improved their agencies’ coordination on U.S. policy and instructed staff to be helpful to us wherever possible.”
The U.S.-New Zealand relationship was further improved with the election of current NZ PM John Key, described in another cable as having a “strongly personal pro-American outlook”.
The closer engagement coincided with increasing US security concerns about the Pacific, including concerns over China’s expansion in to the region.
New Zealand as a Security Force in the Pacific
New Zealand police units with the Regional Assistance Mission to the Solomon Islands. Photo by Michael Field.
New Zealand has seemingly successfully positioned itself as a reliable source of information and as an operational ally in Pacific countries such as Tonga. The 2007 cable reads: “We continue to cooperate closely on events in Fiji and have come to value the views of Kiwi officials regarding events in E.Timor, the Solomon Islands, and Tonga.”
The cooperation is tactical as well. According to the cables, US Assistant Secretary of State for Intelligence and Research Randall Fort “commented that GNZ sigint had been critical to USG understanding of the 2006 coup.”
A 2010 scene-setter for Hilary Clinton’s January visit to New Zealand, features the header: “New Zealand’s Special Relationship with the Pacific Islands”.
It reads:
New Zealand, otherwise a relatively small country on the geopolitical periphery, gains strategic importance if Washington feels it can ‘deliver’ in the Pacific. NZ benefits from highlighting security concerns in the Pacific and placing itself in the center of the solution. The rewards are valuable. The 2010 cable notes: “Our intelligence relationship was fully restored on August 29, 2009 (which should not be acknowledged in public).”
The cables also show that New Zealand presents itself as better equipped to manage the Pacific than Australia. A 2008 cable reports the opinion of Maaten Wevers, who oversees NZ’s intelligence committee: “Often there are significant differences with Australia, he added, as New Zealand is a more Pacific country than Australia and the latter is not always attuned to Pacific developments.”
This message was reinforced in the 2007 cable, which reports that Helen Clark: “also realized after the Fiji coup that New Zealand had become too reliant on Australian intelligence.”
(It is worth noting that, according to a WikiLeaks 2005 Canberra cable on North Korea, Australia had its own issues with NZ. The cable reports: “If U.S. officials wanted to hear the “bleeding hearts” view of “peace and love” with respect to North Korea, [Australian Foreign Minister Alexander] Downer joked, they only had to visit his colleagues in New Zealand.”).
What This Means for Regional Security
In a time when the Pacific is getting more attention from Washington, Wellington’s role in advising on the region is becoming more valued
This is potentially problematic in two ways.
First, NZ’s information and advice may not always be as reliable as thought. There are examples of failure to predict/manage critical situations. For example, mismanagement of the Fiji coup by NZ/Australia resulted in pushing Fiji closer towards the China camp.
Fiji Prime Minister Commodore Frank Bainimarama and Chinese Ambassador to Fiji Cai Jinbiao make a deal.
Similarly, in Tonga, New Zealand has been backing the ‘pro-democracy’ movement. That group triggered riots in 2006 that burned down much of the capital city. Following the riots, failure by NZ to substantially participate in the reconstruction resulted in Tonga having to take out a debilitating loan from China. The fact that a group supported by NZ as pro-democracy resulted in the country becoming indebted to an authoritarian country is a small indication of the something going wrong.
Coincidentally or not, in the 2008 cable, US Assistant Secretary of State for Intelligence and Research, Randall Fort, notes that the larger Pacific region is more fragile today then it was ten years ago.
Another problem is the character of NZ’s engagement of the region (which can affect intelligence gathering, analysis, and operations).
There is a perception of a pervasive NZ ‘we know better’ attitude towards Pacific island nations. For example, NZ is proposing sending a team to train the new Tongan parliamentarians in governance, in spite of the fact that the Tongan system is fundamentally different than the NZ one.
Similarly, in the 2007 cable, NZ Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade Deputy Secretary Caroline Forsyth offered that:
RAMSI troops in the Solomon Islands.
The sort of ‘engagement’ that results in one nation sure thinking it can, and should, make “long-lasting improvements” in another nation’s society does little to build mutual trust and respect.
Second, NZ’s interests are not necessarily US interests. NZ has its own range of national priorities and one would expect it to put those above the interests of partner states, no matter how close the relationship.
For example, the 2010 cable notes that: “There is also collaboration [between the US and NZ] on the Energy Development for Island Nations (EDIN) project, which aims to develop renewable energy resources for Pacific Islands and reduce their dependence on fossil fuels.”
However, as is seen with the proposed Meridian deal, NZ is not above using tied aid to try to get Tonga to buy a solar power plant from a Government of NZ owned company. This could potentially tie Tongan consumers in to high energy costs and so undermining economic development, which can lead to instability, which can lead to greater gains by others, including China (as has happened in the past).
Towards a Secure Pacific
All in all, while a closer relationship between NZ and the US is desirable, it would benefit both nations, as well as the Pacific islands, if the responsibility for the region’s security was more embedded in the region itself.
Given the Pacific’s increasingly geopolitical importance, the US might want to consider opening more diplomatic missions of its own in the Pacific (perhaps even along with the UK and burgeoning partner India), as well as helping to facilitate the opening of reciprocal missions to Washington.
There is a lot of natural warmth towards the West in the Pacific, but the relationship with NZ has left some feeling burned. That can affect intelligence flows and operational capacities, creating vulnerabilities for all concerned. NZ should encourage more direct US engagement in the region, if only to buttress its own intelligence and security.
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Adm. Mike Mullen, U.S. Navy, greets Tongan Honor Guard soldiers during a visit to the kingdom on Nov. 9, 2010. Mullen visited Tonga on the second stop of a Pacific tour to thank the Tongan people for their continuing dedication and support in sending troops to Iraq and Afghanistan. DoD photo by Petty Officer 1st Class Chad J. McNeeley, U.S. Navy.

This Blogger’s Books from
Global Warring: How Environmental, Economic and Political Crises will Redraw the World Map
by Cleo Paskal
Global Warring: How Environmental, Economic and Political Crises will Redraw the World Map
by Cleo Paskal

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Nov
24

Why the West Is Losing the Pacific to China the Arab League and Just About Everyone Else

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Why the West Is Losing the Pacific to China the Arab League and Just About Everyone Else

Nuku’alofa, Kingdom of Tonga. The small South Pacific country of the Kingdom of Tonga has been busy. In a two-week period around the start of September, separate military delegations from the US, New Zealand, Australia, UK, India and the UN stopped by for a visit. The French sent a frigate and a military aircraft. China sent two warships.
Chinese Navy Ship Visiting The Kingdom of Tonga
Why all this activity in a country of 100,000? There is real concern that the West may be losing critical influence in the Pacific, while others such as China, and even the Arab League, are dramatically extending their reach. The implications are global, and may already have affected UN Security Council voting. It wasn’t always this way. The Pacific is the West’s to lose.
Recent history of geopolitics in the Pacific — Western Heydays
From a security perspective, since WWII, the nations of the Pacific have been considered part of the West (and in particular the American) security zone. However, especially since the end of the Cold War, the larger Western powers, including the US and UK, started to lose interest in the region. There was a sense that the West had ‘won’ and so strategic concerns could take a back seat to commercial ones.
That meant standing down what were considered primarily security or power projection-related postings. For example, around five years ago, the UK shut three high commissions (embassies) in the Pacific, including the one in Tonga. From a Western security perspective, the day-to-day management of the region was essentially handed over to Australia and New Zealand (A/NZ).
Unfortunately, while there is no questioning the deep bonds between A/NZ and the nations of the Pacific, some of the A/NZ policies in the region seem to have an old-style colonial bent. Countries like the Kingdom of Tonga, for example, are often seen by A/NZ largely as places to export excess or subpar products, and from where to import cheap seasonal labor (for example, Tongan seasonal workers pick New Zealand’s kiwi crop).
Nor have Australia and New Zealand been consistently helpful with international trade agreements.
In 2005, for example, when Tonga signed on to the WTO, Oxfam’s Phil Bloomer said: “The terms of Tonga’s accession package are appalling”, worse than any other than Armenia. According to Oxfam, Tonga was allowed to impose tariffs of no more than 20% on any product. By comparison, the US can apply a 350% tariff on beef imports, and the EU can apply an equivalent tariff of over 300% on sugar imports. Oxfam NZ Executive Director, Barry Coates said: “To our shame, New Zealand, as a member of the working party that negotiated Tonga’s accession, has participated in this process.”
In short, until recently, Australia and New Zealand have largely been practicing classic old school sphere-of-influence economic and political policies in the Pacific, while larger Western allies, such as the US and UK focused on other matters.
Geopolitics as it is — Looking for new friends
The problem is these sphere-of-influence policies are a based on a Cold War-era model, in which the traditional allies are the only game in town and so can decide policy in a relative geopolitical vacuum.
Those days are long gone. In an increasingly multipolar world, all sorts of new foreign policy options are available, especially as the enormous value of the island nations of the Pacific becomes increasingly clear.
From a geopolitical perspective, the nations of the Pacific offer (among other things):
Sea-lanes and ports in relatively calm waters (increasingly important as China, in particular, increases trade with South America);
Access to fisheries (something increasingly important as the Atlantic is fished out);
Agricultural exports (especially important as concerns over food security increase in countries such as China);
Unknown but potentially valuable underwater resources;
Geostrategic military basing sites;
Crucial votes in international fora (Pacific Island countries represent around a dozen votes in the UN – a substantial voting block).
Given what is at stake, other nations are understandably keen to take advantage of discontent with traditional partners in order to advance their own position in the Pacific.
West drops the ball, China picks it up
Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao (R) shakes hands with Dr. Fred Sevele, prime minister of Tonga, at the opening of the the First Ministerial Conference of the China-Pacific Island Countries Economic Development and Cooperation Forum in Nadi, Fiji, April 5, 2006.
For example, following the ‘pro-democracy’ riots in Tonga in 2006, A/NZ sent in troops, but they didn’t provide access to funding needed to rebuild. China jumped into the gap and ended providing the major loan for rebuilding downtown. So, ironically, due to a lack of support by democratic allies, a ‘pro-democracy’ action ended up indebting Tonga even more to a non-democratic nation.
The China loan (along with other aspects of the growing Tonga-China relationship) has international repercussions. When I asked one member of Tonga’s delegation to the Copenhagen climate conference what the country’s negotiating position would be, I was told: “whatever China says it is, we owe them hundreds of millions of dollars.”
Similarly, when A/NZ tried to isolate Fiji after the 2006 coup, that left the field wide open for China, which quickly developed deep ties with Fiji.
Discontent with the A/NZ handling of Fiji also gave momentum to the Pacific Small Island Developing States group (P-SIDS). P-SIDS does not include Australia and New Zealand and is tentatively charting a new geopolitical course for the Pacific.
Arab league on the playing field
Arab League and Pacific Island leaders meet in Abu Dhabi, June 2010
Members of this grouping recently met in Abu Dhabi with the members of the Arab League. While the Arab League pledged tens of millions of dollars aid and a growing trade relationship with the Pacific nations, Pacific leaders supported the Arab League’s call for a nuclear-free Middle East (which targets Iran and Israel).
P-SIDS may have given even more tangible support to the Arab League in the latest voting round for seats on the UN Security Council. Australia was backing Canada for a seat while the United Arab Emirates was opposing.
According to international relations expert Dr Richard Herr from the University of Tasmania, in the Pacific ”There was a sentiment that Australia went too far, that it was pushing its own objectives to get a seat down the track.” The vote was secret, but Canada lost. Fiji, for one, has openly said it didn’t vote for Canada. If the P-SIDS did back the UAE position, and continue along that path, it could mean a whole new ball game in the UN.
So where are we now?
Geopolitically, the impression is growing that, while the nations of the Pacific are still solidly part of the West, desperation caused by out of date economic and political policies (compounded by ongoing costly damage caused environmental change as well as demographic challenges) is forcing leaders to look to anyone who can help.
From a Western perspective, this is a potential growing security concern, especially given the growing tensions between China and the US (on display, for example, in the South China Sea). The Pacific is once again a front line.
American Samoa’s member of the US Congress, Eni Faleomavaega, bluntly expressed concern that the “inept policies and heavy-handed actions” of the Australian and New Zealand governments were putting American interests in the region at risk. He also pointed out that the interest of New Zealand and Australia may not always be the same as the interests of America.
Not coincidentally, there has been a sudden and growing interest from Washington in the Pacific islands. Apart from the visits to Tonga, on November 7, Secretary of State Hilary Clinton made a point of visiting American Samoa, and the US announced the reopening of USAID posts in Fiji with a budget of US$21 million.
A few days later, the Kingdom of Tonga received another visitor — the highest ranking one of the season: Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Admiral Mullen. Interestingly, part of Mullen’s support team for the visit included top regionally based UK government personnel. These are symbolic visits. Clearly, there is concern in Washington and London about the management of the region.
Lord Tuita, Admiral Michael Mullen, HRH Princess Pilolevu, and Mrs Deborah Mullen
The Big Boys are back. And not just in the islands. On the same trip Clinton visited American Samoa, she established a new strategic relationship with New Zealand. And in Australia she was joined by Mullen and Secretary of Defense Robert Gates to discuss base sharing in Australia as concerns rise that the US may need to downsize its Japan-based bases.
The bases would be part of the US’s new “forward-deployed diplomacy” in the region. The generally given reason for the need for the bases is to be able to aid in the case of humanitarian disasters, though analysts agree that the real reason is concern over China. Interestingly, India, especially after President Obama’s recent trip there, may become an increasingly important US partner in the region.
What next?
The Pacific is the West’s to lose. But to engage effectively it needs to understand that the days of old-fashioned colonial engagement have to end.
For example, one promising initiative is the Tonga Energy Road Map, an exciting vision for renewable energy development, lauded by the World Bank, IRENA, and others as a model for the future. Unfortunately, parts of the Road Map are already being undermined by traditional partners.
In spite of signing on to a Road Map Declaration that include the key principle of no tied aid, New Zealand is currently in the process of offering aid for a solar power plant, but only if that plant is built by a New Zealand government-owned company. Details of the agreement have yet to be released, however if the plant results in tying Tongan consumers to high-energy costs (or unreliable supply), it could be severally detrimental to the economy. It is of concern that the contract was not open for competitive bidding.
New Zealand and other have to start to understand that in small, fragile economies, these sorts of agreements can seriously undermine domestic growth and stability in nations that should be natural allies, forcing them in to situations where they look to others for outside help.
Tied aid may give specific sectors of the New Zealand economy a small, short-term advantage, but it can compromise the security of the region, and ultimately of New Zealand (and of the West).
In these changing times, if one weaken ones allies, one weakens oneself.
Of course, much can be said about the way others, such as China, engage in the region. But it is particularly problematic when free market, democratic nations, with deep and natural ties to the Pacific, enact policies that may have the ultimate effect of impeding the development of both the free market and democracy in nations that are considered allies.
For the West to create security in the Pacific (something that would reap benefits around the world) all it takes is developing equitable, long-term partnerships with countries like the Kingdom of Tonga.
The military visits are a start, but they need to be followed up with academic scholarships to the US/UK/Canada/etc., direct flights, low-tariff market access for Pacific products, access to low interest loans, and others indicators that the engagement is real, deep, and there for the long run.
If the West isn’t there for the nations of the Pacific, someone else will be.
Sign at the construction site of the Cook Islands Courthouse, financed and built by China

This Blogger’s Books from
Global Warring: How Environmental, Economic and Political Crises will Redraw the World Map
by Cleo Paskal
Global Warring: How Environmental, Economic and Political Crises will Redraw the World Map
by Cleo Paskal

Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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Nov
22

Columbine and Australia

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Columbine and Australia

The suicidal twins from Australia showed us that once again, it comes back to Columbine. Or, as columnist Mike Littwin in the Denver Post put it, “The enduring lesson of Columbine is, of course, that it never goes away.”
The story of the 29-year-old sisters promised to be another crime with a bizarre twist. Then the Columbine angle got added in.
Kristin and Candice Hermeler attempted a double suicide at an Arapahoe County shooting range this past Monday, relatively close to Columbine High School (at least compared to Australia), where gunmen Dylan Klebold and Eric Harris shot themselves after shooting dead 13 others.
One of the Australian women, Kristin, is dead. The other, Candice, has survived.
Investigators found a photocopy of a May 1999 Time magazine cover with the images of Harris and Klebold “among the twins’ belongings,” the Denver Post reported. Kristin had also written at least two letters to Brooks Brown, the on again off again friend of Harris and Klebold, after the 1999 shootings.
Candice has denied any Columbine influence, but Columbine does seem part of the equation. Kristin wrote Brooks that she had identified with Harris and Klebold because she had been “rejected, victimized, ostracized.”
When the Columbine connection to this story became known, I was waiting for media criticism along the lines of , “If Time magazine hadn’t put Harris and Klebold on the cover, these women wouldn’t have been influenced to commit suicide.”
But suicide, and school shootings, (which are intertwined) are not that easy. People are not driven to such extreme acts because they read a story – or played a violent video game.
The Hermeler story is still developing, but preliminarily, victimization looks to be a root cause. Examining those types of issues, and promoting help for those who feel suicidal, are crucial. And the media can play a role by investigating problems and solutions rather than being blamed for them.

This Blogger’s Books from
Columbine: A True Crime Story, a victim, the killers and the nation’s search for answers
by Jeff Kass

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Nov
22

The 2010 Newsroom Lean and Techy

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The 2010 Newsroom Lean and Techy

Newsrooms should be converged, integrated, flexible, lean and techy, to survive in today’s fast-changing media landscape, but news organizations should still focus on good story telling.
The mantra is repeated throughout “Trends in Newsrooms 2010,” (TIN) a rich guide for editors and publishers struggling with slumping circulations, shrinking revenues, layoffs, closures, shifts from print to online, and, competition from social media and citizen journalism.
The New York Times www.nytimes.com hired a social media editor last year to concentrate “full-time on expanding the use of social media networks and publishing platforms to improve New York Times journalism and deliver it to readers,” TIN quoted a statement from the paper.
TIN, produced by the Paris-based World Editors Forum www.worldeditorsforum.org, said the BBC www.bbc.co.uk created a similar position in November 2009 to guide “Beeb” journalists in their use of social media rather than have that editor scan the various services for stories himself.
“A new breed of journalists has been playfully dubbed the ‘Robocop’ editors, in reference to the technological skills and expertise they bring to the editorial team,” TIN explained, adding that the increasing importance of the Web and digital media for news organizations will inevitably lead to an evolution of the jobs of editors and journalists, as they become more knowledgeable with digital tools.
But, it cautioned, this mustn’t occur at the expense of traditional journalism skills.
So, how do newspapers, in particular, handle the break-neck fast-forward without incurring serious damage?
There’s no one-size-fits-all, according to TIN, but it carefully examines examples of successes, faltering experiments, and works in progress, from different countries that could serve as helpful templates for those still contemplating the inevitable change.
The book is divided into eight chapters tracing the crisis facing newspapers in recent years, issues of whether or not to charge for content, the impact of new devices with tips for mobile strategies, managing integrated newsrooms, niche, hyperlocal and customized news, entrepreneurial journalism, social networks in the news, and, top mobile apps.
iPad revolution (Abu-Fadil)
Chapter 1 examines the “broken” American and British print models, migration to online-only products, and whether the state should intervene to save papers with tax breaks, subsidies and stimulus packages.
It also zeroes in on cost-cutting measures such as consolidation of operations, content-sharing agreements, slashing salaries, and the need for viable online business models.
“News Corp Leads the Paywall Revolution,” reads a sub-headline on early adopters of the trend in Chapter 2.
A sidebar lists a series of quotes by News Corp www.newscorp.com chief Rupert Murdoch from April to December 2009 stating his intention to charge for his news websites, since quality journalism was not cheap.
True, but Alan Rusbridger, editor of Britain’s Guardian www.guardian.co.uk newspaper, begged to differ about the options of subscriptions, metered paywalls or micropayments:
“Journalists have never before been able to tell stories so effectively, bouncing off each other, linking to each other (as the most generous and open-minded do), linking out, citing sources, allowing response – harnessing the best qualities of text, print, data, sound and visual media. If ever there was a route to building audience, trust and relevance, it is by embracing all the capabilities of this new world, not walling yourself away from them.”
Turning to new devices, Chaper 3 asks if they will really change the news, and sheds light on the fast rise of e-readers, smart phones and tablets as the niche for news content delivery.
“For a publisher, an app offers an opportunity to create a more branded experience, and crucially the chance to increase revenue, either by charging for the download of the application or by requiring a subscription for access, or via advertising, which can be targeted via location,” TIN said in answer to: Is An App Necessary?”
A crucial issue is how to manage an integrated newsroom, with Chapter 4 offering 101 possible models and referring to editors who believe it’s no longer “whether,” but “when” and “how” to integrate.
At WAN-IFRA’s www.wan-ifra.org 9th International Newsroom Summit in London in September, The Washington Post’s www.washingtonpost.com Managing Editor Raju Narisetti said building a new generation newsroom was a question of survival.
Admitting 2009 was a very tough year for revenue streams, Narisetti said the Post had integrated into a 24-hour web-first newsroom, but that it assigned digital responsibilities, retained specialists (since not every photographer can do video well), enabled and equipped its journalists, but did not insist they become jacks of all trades.
Chapter 5 deals with niche, hyperlocal and customized news. According to TIN, the sports niche is faring well, notably in countries like Brazil, “where football is king.”
Sites like Australia’s www.marineweather.com.au have also carved out niches for devotees, while others have turned to social networks, bespoke interests and consumer guides to attract ad dollars.
The hyperlocal world flourishes, but uncertainty remains, is TIN’s assertion. It pointed to Dutch Telegraaf Media Group’s www.tmg.nl managing editor Bart Brouwers that it said was leading the company’s effort to build community-based journalism.
Bart Brouwers (Abu-Fadil)
A much-discussed topic in recent months has been investigative and non-profit journalism, with Pro Publica www.propublica.org tagged as a Pulitzer Prize winning trailblazer in the field.
Chapter 7 spotlights news on social media networks, social networks in the news, building on the link economy – with a whole section dedicated to Google’s www.google.com role – and user-generated content.
Finally, Chapter 8 provides advice on mobile apps, albeit dated, since the proliferation of mobile devices and applications development has gone through the roof in recent months.
Trends in Newsrooms 2010′s examples come mainly from North American and European news organizations.
Admittedly, many advances have evolved in those regions, but Asian and Latin American newsrooms have also made progress and deserve more attention.
Interestingly, no mention is made of Middle Eastern and North African newsrooms.
But the book is an excellent reference with its wealth of information, produced by professionals who keep close tabs on the media’s evolution and stay ahead of the curve with their Editors Weblog http://www.editorsweblog.org and Shaping the Future of the Newspaper blog http://www.sfnblog.com.

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Nov
18

Chic Trek Adelaide South Australia VIDEO

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Chic Trek Adelaide South Australia VIDEO

I visited the charming and multifaceted city of Adelaide in South Australia for the first time last week. It’s actually Australia’s cultural capital — in more ways than one — from Edwardian architecture to a hopping urban arts scene. Experience part of that short-but-sweet trip through the video below, “Chic Trek: Adelaide, South Australia.”

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Nov
11

Winter Honeymoon Destinations to Embrace the Coldor not PHOTOS

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Winter Honeymoon Destinations to Embrace the Coldor not PHOTOS

Winter is well and truly upon us and the cold, dark mornings are here to stay for now. Other than deciding how many layers of clothing to climb into, a few of us here at Black Tomato have something else entirely on our mind: winter weddings – and with that, winter honeymoon destinations.
Now for the big question (no, not the ‘I do’s): Hot or cold? A luxury honeymoon swapping the bitter wind for the beach, or a cosy honeymoon by the fire? Decisions, decisions…
To help narrow it all down, here’s our top ten winter honeymoon destinations. Some for the sun worshipers and others for the snow lovers. Which one are you?
Hot: Secret Islands in Australia
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To get Down Under and escape the summer crowds, Kangaroo Island is the place. Cliff-top views, miles of white sand beaches and clear turquoise waters without the masses: sounds good, no? Plus from December to February the animal lover in you can see the newborn baby sea lions and koalas emerge. All together now aaaww.
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Nov
11

Australian Locust Thrive Rocky Mountain Ones Disappear

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Australian Locust Thrive Rocky Mountain Ones Disappear

A plague of locusts of biblical proportion has hatched and is growing as Australia, the fourth largest grain exporter, has gone form 13 years of bone-dry drought to the wettest September since the inception of record keeping in 1860.
The hatch of late August is of epic size with an astounding 80 percent survival rate, three times greater than the normal rate.
A half-mile wide swarm of Australian Plague locusts (Chortoicetes terminifera) can chew through 10 tons of crops a day. They move slowly in the day but at night they fly high and fast, traveling distances of over 120 miles.
In an attempt to protect a bumper harvest Australian bio-security agencies have sprayed insecticides over 600,000 acres. Bee scientists around the nation are predicting high death rates amongst honey and native bee populations as a result of these synthetic toxins. Yet, the grain harvest from Down Under is especially important this year because this past summer Canada, China and Pakistan were flooded, while Russia and parts of the Ukraine were drought-ravaged. The effects of global warming are beginning to severely deplete the world’s grain stockpiles.
Locusts are highly mobile grasshopper likened as the Olympians of the 10,000 grasshopper species worldwide. Locust outbreaks occur on every inhabited continent.
Settlers in the 19th century witnessed blackened skies with trillions of Rocky Mountain locust sweeping across the North American continent in swarms larger than any known biological phenomenon on Earth.
And then all of a sudden they vanished. In fact, the last small swarm was spotted in Manitoba in 1902.
It’s a modern day whodunit that took a century before entomologist Professor Jeffrey Lockwood of the University of Wyoming finally solved it.
The Rocky Mountain locust or Melanoplus spretus was the despicable black knight of the North American continent. In essence it was the equivalent of an 18th century Darth Vader.
The last major outbreak was recorded between 1874 and 1877. An infestation of at least seven trillion insects destroyed in excess of $200 million of crops — valued today at $123 billion of damage or half the value of the entire U.S. agriculture industry.
In 1875, a swarm measuring 124 miles long by 37 miles wide moved at a rate of 11 mph and an estimated 3.5 trillion locusts devoured an area in North America approximating the size of Connecticut, Delaware, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island and Vermont.
Rocky Mountain locust outbreaks were cyclical and driven by drought.
Locust swarms descended from the Albertan, Montanan and Wyoming Rockies in June.
As the locust advanced south and east as they mated. Females laid clusters or pods of about 30 eggs and buried them in the soil. Those adults lived for about two months.
Summer hatches underwent five growth phases, matured and hibernated over winter, awakening in the warmth of May.
Populations would accumulate over three or four years before entering biblical plague proportions.
Hot dry weather weakened plants defense mechanisms and increased the nutritional value of the vegetation as sugars and other nutrients concentrated in leaves.
And prolonged droughts sped up the locust life cycle resulting in a faster breeding cycle.
Finally, droughts restricted lush vegetation to swales (well tended agricultural fields), locusts aggregated and then over crowded, ravenous swarms began to disperse en masse.
In addition, these colossal swarms were assisted across the prairies by the Great Plains low-level jet stream.
Prior to European settlement about 45 million bison roamed the plains consuming about 11 million tons of vegetation a year.
Aperiodic Rocky Mountain locust outbreaks estimated by Professor Lockwood supported 15 trillion locusts as these insatiable insects destroyed about 8.8 million tons of plant life in one summer.
In the late 1980s, ice cores from Knife Point Glacier, Wyoming unearthed 250, intact, frozen Rocky Mountain locust. They clearly revealed the evidenced of 300 years of outbreaks that commenced in the 17th century.
Lockwood’s team was now able to assemble all the necessary pieces of the jigsaw puzzle and conclusively solve why the Rocky Mountain locust vanished.
In the 1870s more than two million settlers were transplanted across the Western North American prairies.
Populations of Rocky Mountain locust spread across Alberta, Montana and Wyoming of say 10 million; each required about 2,400 acres of either river bottoms, sunny uplands or subalpine grassy areas providing a permanent breeding ground, thus enabling swarms to eventually attain trillions of insects.
These permanent populations buried their eggs in well-drained soils.
It just so happened that the permanent Rocky Mountain locust breeding grounds were the exact fertile sites that the early settlers chose to cultivate. Hence egg masses were either flooded to death or ploughed under.
The awesome short and tall prairie grasses of North America were able to sustain millions of bison and trillions of Rocky Mountain locusts.
The reason in large part why the prairies are so rich is due to the hidden half, the incredible world of soils. Plant roots and soils are living, breathing, breeding communities of trillions of bacteria, fungi, protozoa, nematodes, micro-arthropods, worms, beetles and so much more. They decompose recently died plant materials and add them to the humus layer, ensuring structure, aeration and water retention of the soil. Plant roots actively release food into the soil to promote micro-organism development.
Modern agriculture systems use chemical pesticides, fumigants, fungicides, herbicides and fertilizers that kill a vast range of beneficial micro-organisms. Micro-organisms promote healthy plant growth, boost plant defense mechanisms and naturally break down pollutants in the soil. In fact, conventional agriculture has reduced bacterial numbers from trillions per gram of soil in the root zone to a mere couple of million.
The grandfather of organic farming, Sir Albert Howard, understood that any agriculture system is only as good as its soil. I am thrilled to report that organics is the fastest growing business sector in the U.S. exceeding $25 billion last year.
Today, some 340 million North Americans’ rely on these exact soils for our daily sustenance — these soils must be very carefully managed especially since unprecedented droughts are forecast for the coming decades.
Dr Reese Halter is a Science Communicator: Voice for Ecology, conservation biologist at California Lutheran University, public speaker and author of The Incomparable Honeybee.

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Nov
10

Vineyards of South Australias Barossa Valley PHOTOS

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Vineyards of South Australias Barossa Valley PHOTOS

I am currently touring South Australia and recently went on a handful of wine tastings through its famous Barossa Valley region. I was lucky enough to have been put under the care of Life is a Cabernet Tours and its guide Ralf Hadzic who shuttled my colleagues and I around the vineyards for tastings galore.
Another great way to see these gorgeous pastoral spots and sample some wines is via bike (which we also did). Wyndham House, proprietor of the exclusive and stunning boutique vineyard accommodation Mooroooroo Park led our bike tour through the Barossa Ranges. Pristine new bicycles are available for rent through the inn.
I began this trip a wine-loving newbie but believe I have been transformed into a major shiraztafarian through this epic S. Oz journey. I hope you enjoy this slideshow of the vineyards of the Barossa as much as I enjoyed the real deal.
Welcome to the Barossa
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Sixty-six percent of the Australian wines that make it to the U.S. marketplace come from South Australia whose chief winemaking region (beyond the Clare Valley) is the Barossa Valley. Within the Barossa Ranges lies Eden Valley, a pocket that is two to three degrees cooler than the rest of the Valley. As a result, its grapes ripen later in the season producing more so-called ‘feminine’ wines. Cabernet/Shiraz is a popular blend in the Barossa Valley. This is just some of the info travelers to the region can expect to learn when they pay a visit to the vineyards and tasting rooms of the Barossa.
Photo by Shana Ting Lipton
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Nov
07

Daylight SavingsWhos Benefitting

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Daylight SavingsWhos Benefitting

“Spring Forward, Fall Back” was proposed by Ben Franklin as a way to save energy. Proponents later argued that it reduces traffic accidents and crime, promotes shopping, provides more time to play golf all supported with varying degrees of science, wishful thinking and fantasy.
Daylight savings was first adopted in World War 1, abandoned after the war and then restarted by the US during World War II. It lasted 3 years before it was repealed again. Reintroduced in the 60′s, daylight savings time has been modified ever since and is followed by many countries around the world with different places having different start and stop dates. To add to the confusion, Hawaii, part of Arizona, and the territories including Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands do not observe daylight savings time.
Many of us find the resetting of the clocks annoying but naturally wonder if there’s any science behind daylight savings time conserving energy?
In 1975 the Department of Transportation reported that daylight savings resulted in cost savings but that report was soon dismissed by the National Bureau of Standards. Simulations whether it be by California Energy Commission (2001), the Department of Energy (2006) or the many other researchers that have built computer models are less meaningful than actual usage measurements. Luckily a few studies have used real world data, not simulations.
A study involving Australia around the time of the 2000 Olympics showed there was an increase, not decrease in electrical usage based on comparisons of neighboring states where two had started daylight savings time and one hadn’t.
In the US, a household level study based on data from Indiana (where some counties had daylight savings in 2004 and all had in 2006) between 2004-6 showed that daylight savings time resulted in more electricity being used as decreased illumination costs were more than offset by higher heating and cooling costs. This research addressed a small part of the energy consumption pie: in 2004 residential usage was 21% of total energy consumption less than industrial (33%) and transportation (28%) and commercial (17%) but research should be done on the other energy users.
Michael Downing, author of “Spring Forward: The Annual Madness of Daylight Saving Time” stated that daylight savings has never realized energy savings but it succeeds at getting Americans to spend more money.
My conclusion is that daylight savings time is not going away in my lifetime. Politicians don’t care about the shaky scientific case for energy savings but do care about campaign funding and re-elections.
Daylight savings is a minor topic. The much more important point is that in general we should be extra cautious of any program or policy whose justification changes over time as the data shows each previous explanation to be questionable or false.

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Oct
22

DVD Review Forbidden Lie

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DVD Review Forbidden Lie

Jordanian-born Norma Khouri gained international attention when her 2003 memoir Forbidden Love recalled how her best friend Dahlia, a Muslim, was murdered for her chaste relationship with a Christian soldier. The book drew attention to the phenomenon of honor killings in places like the Middle East, Africa and even Europe and made Khouri, who was living in Australia at the time, an international figure.
It’s too bad the book was actually a work of shoddy fiction.
Khouri wasn’t even living in Amman during the mid 1990s during the period when the book takes place, and neither Dahlia nor star-crossed love ever existed. Khouri had been living in Chicago since she was three and has been investigated for fraud by the FBI. Furthermore, she had been married with two children, but didn’t bother to mention her spouse or her offspring during her press tours.
Khouri’s fabrications are so obvious, it’s a wonder that they weren’t found when the book was in manuscript form. Any reader looking at a map of Jordan while reading the book would have discovered that she incorrectly names the countries bordering the nation and describes a river flowing nowhere near its actual path.
While Khouri’s mendacity is uncontestable, Australian filmmaker Anna Broinowski thankfully has more on her mind than simply debunking her subject in Forbidden Lie$. That would have been too easy and would have made for tedious viewing.
Instead, Broinowski follows both her subject and her detractors in an attempt to find out why she’s lying and why she got away with it for over a year. Broinowski even follows Khouri through Jordan in an attempt to prove that while the author had changed the circumstances of Dahlia’s death, both she and the crime were real.
In the process, Broinowski reveals that more was at stake than simple white lies. The director includes interviews with a Jordanian journalist named Rana Husseini, who has been covering honor killings for years. Husseini rightly complains that the book stoked Islamophobia and inadvertently harmed the efforts she and others have made to stop these senseless murders. The book’s soapy tone trivialized an urgent issue that has plagued both Christian and Muslim communities. Further, while the book’s cover claims royalties were sent to organizations that prevented honor killings, none of these existing groups in Jordan have apparently received a penny or a dinar.
What makes Forbidden Lie$ engrossing is that Broinowski has gained a remarkable level of cooperation from both Khouri and her detractors. On the DVD, Khouri even joins Broinowski on the commentary track. As a result, the film raises some disturbing questions. Why had dozens of western media outlets allowed her to peddle her falsehoods for so long and how can Random House easily brush off the book and its author after spending considerable resources publishing and promoting?
In one jaw-dropping sequence, Khouri even shot footage of herself attempting to bait Broinowski with a false lead. For the most part, though, Khuouri has an almost admirable tenacity by sticking to her stories even as she digs herself into an even deeper hole.
Forbidden Lie$ is also slickly photographed and visually intriguing. Broinowski uses CGI trickery and process shots to make reality seem even more elusive. She appears to be warning her audience not to take any story, not even her own, at face value.

This Blogger’s Books from
Forbidden Lie$
Directed by Anna Broinowski

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Oct
19

As the Extraction World Turns Peabody Doubles Profits 37 Dead Chinese Miners 70000 Indian Children in Mines

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As the Extraction World Turns Peabody Doubles Profits 37 Dead Chinese Miners 70000 Indian Children in Mines

As the world continues to hail the wonderful rescue of the Chilean copper and gold miners, 37 coal miners died from a gas leak in China this week, bringing that nation’s deathtoll on track for a record year.
Peabody Energy, the world’s largest coal provider, just announced its quarterly profits have doubled due to international operations. Despite major concerns over water supplies, desertification, and workplace safety, Peabody recently announced its intention to open some of the largest mines in Mongolia.
According to NGO group Oyu Tolgoi Watch, “Mongolia is experiencing higher degree of climate change — over 70 percent of Mongolia’s territory is suffering desertification. That is a big concern.”
Meanwhile, in Zambia, Chinese security guards opened fire on coal miners protesting their low wages.
In the Jaintia Hills in northeast India, according to human rights organizations, over 70,000 children continue to labor in dangerous rathole coal mines. In a recent piece in the Christian Science Monitor, children as young as seven were working in abysmal conditions, including some reportedly sold as indentured servants. The CSM reported:
The CSM report also includes a photo essay.
As India’s King Coal–India Coal–goes public this week on the stock market in a historic sale, devastating coal mine operations in the state of Jharkhand continue to displace adivasi tribal populations, and employ women and children in unsafe conditions.
British photojournalist Robert Wallis released this essay on the “Dark Side of the Boom” in India’s coalfields.
While China reportedly built a wind turbine an hour in 2009, and are steamrolling ahead with solar power production, the country just announced its record demands for coal imports.

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Oct
14

Green News Report October 14 2010 Audio

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Green News Report October 14 2010 Audio

TWITTER: @GreenNewsReport.
The ‘GNR’ is also now available on your cell phone via Stitcher Radio’s mobile app!.
IN TODAY’S RADIO REPORT: Obama lifts the ban on offshore oil drilling, even as oil continues to wash up on beach in the Gulf; Google goes offshore too – with wind; A new solar project on public lands in Nevada; Seattle says goodbye to the big yellow phone book … PLUS: Good news for a change: all 33 Chilean Miners are rescued … All that and more in today’s Green News Report!
Got comments, tips, love letters, hate mail? Drop us a line at GreenNews@BradBlog.com or right here at the comments link below. All GNRs are always archived at GreenNews.BradBlog.com.
IN ‘GREEN NEWS EXTRA’ (see links below): T. Boone Pickens’ wife may save U.S. wild horses; EPA to increase ethanol requirements for gasoline; Australia joins other countries in banning pesticide endosulfan; Photo shows apparent leak before Hungary spill; Big Oil spending big bucks on university research programs; UN urges African leaders to tackle climate change; UN also urges rich nations to make largest emissions cuts; Climate change denial industry pounces on physicist’s resignation; Study: world’s two largest ice sheets melting faster than predicted …PLUS: Canada declares plastics chemical BPA to Be Toxic …
‘Green News Report’ is heard on many fine radio stations around the country. For additional info on stories we covered today, plus today’s ‘Green News Extra’, please click right here…

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Sep
30

Green News Report September 30 2010 Audio

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Green News Report September 30 2010 Audio

TWITTER: @GreenNewsReport.
The ‘GNR’ is also now available on your cell phone via Stitcher Radio’s mobile app!
IN TODAY’S RADIO REPORT: Koala Chlamydia; Coal protests around the world; New Rules for offshore drilling; PLUS: The Governator slams Big Oil and corporate campaign cash … All that and more in today’s Green News Report!
Got comments, tips, love letters, hate mail? Drop us a line at GreenNews@BradBlog.com or right here at the comments link below. All GNRs are always archived at GreenNews.BradBlog.com.
IN ‘GREEN NEWS EXTRA’ (see links below): Avatar director James Cameron says oil sands will become “curse”; DOE: Small solar power systems could provide enough power for big utilities; Chuitna and the Curse of Coal; Nissan LEAF already sold out in U.S. — before it’s even for sale; The Vatican goes green; EPA hits Illinois over factory farm water pollution; McCain now a climate conspiracy theorist; Lawmakers move to stop genetically modified salmon; One-fifth of world’s plants at risk of extinction; Biochar could help climate change fight; California raises Renewable Portfolio Standard to 33% …PLUS: Meet Generation Hot …
‘Green News Report’ is heard on many fine radio stations around the country. For additional info on stories we covered today, plus today’s ‘Green News Extra’, please click right here…

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Sep
28

Green News Report September 28 2010 Audio

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Green News Report September 28 2010 Audio

TWITTER: @GreenNewsReport.
The ‘GNR’ is also now available on your cell phone via Stitcher Radio’s mobile app!
IN TODAY’S RADIO REPORT: SoCal is sooo hot – all-time record heat in L.A.!; “Hockey Stick” graph vindicated – again; Half a billion corporate dollars to kill clean energy legislation … PLUS: DOJ gives a pass to BP … All that and more in today’s Green News Report!
Got comments, tips, love letters, hate mail? Drop us a line at GreenNews@BradBlog.com or right here at the comments link below. All GNRs are always archived at GreenNews.BradBlog.com.
IN ‘GREEN NEWS EXTRA’ (see links below): Halliburton Makes the Dow Jones Sustainability Index (and pigs fly); More than 100 Arrested at White House Demanding End to Mountaintop Removal; Australian climate activists close down world’s largest coal port; 100% green electricity in Scotland ‘achievable’ by 2025; For U.S. Wildlife, a Climate Change Blueprint; Reported leak rate for PG&E’s ‘high-consequence’ gas lines far exceeds national average; California raises Renewable Portfolio Standard to 33%; The Perils of Hydro-Fracking; Water Use in Southwest Heads for a Day of Reckoning …PLUS: Energy Production Pushing Water Supply to Choke Point …
‘Green News Report’ is heard on many fine radio stations around the country. For additional info on stories we covered today, plus today’s ‘Green News Extra’, please click right here…

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